A Reply to the "Sorrowful Epistle"

by Fr. Alexander Schmemann

The "Sorrowful Epistle" addressed by "Humble
Filaret, Metropolitan of the Russian Church Outside Russia" to "Their Holinesses
and Their Beatitudes, the Primates of the Holy Orthodox Churches, the Most Reverend
Metropolitans, Archbishops and Bishops" is the last and probably the most important
document in the long series of statements emanating from the "Russian Church Outside
Russia," and which, in the last years, tried to arouse the Orthodox opinion by
affirming: that the Orthodox Church is falling prey to the "heresy of
Ecumenism," and that this "heresy" is spread within the Church, primarily
by the Patriarch of Constantinople Athenagoras I and his Exarch in America, Archbishop
Iakovos. More specifically, the "Sorrowful Epistle" claims that by signing, or
at least by not objecting to, the decisions of last years Assembly
of the World Council of Churches in Uppsala, its Orthodox participants have betrayed
the original and somewhat more acceptable basis for the Orthodox participation in the
ecumenical movement.

Grave Accusations

These, as one can see, are very grave accusations. The entire Orthodox Church is
implied since virtually all autocephalous Churches were represented in Uppsala, sometimes
by their highest hierarchs. Patriarch Gherman of Serbia was even elected to the presidency
of the WCC. These accusations, moreover, create a malaise among the Orthodox and threaten
the very unity of the Church. They must be taken seriously and discussed at the highest
possible level. Before this is done, however, some preliminary questions must be raised,
which, I hope to show, are of paramount importance for an orderly solution of any problem
that may arise within the Orthodox Church. The purpose of this article is to formulate at
least some of them.

From a purely formal point of view, the "Epistle" under consideration is an
appeal addressed by one Orthodox bishop to his brothers in the Episcopate, urging them to
take more seriously a matter which, in his opinion, his brother-bishops have treated
"without sufficient attention." Most certainly it is the right and the duty of
each bishop to communicate with his brothers on matters pertaining to the very essence of
the Orthodox Faith, and who would deny that "ecumenism" in general, and more
particularly the alarming trends made manifest at Uppsala, fall within this category? We
can assure Metropolitan Filaret that he is not alone in having been "greatly
shocked" by much of the Uppsala Report. Many pronouncements and actions of Patriarch
Athenagoras as well as Archbishop Iakovos, having provoked serious controversies among the
Orthodox, are equally open to scrutiny by the Episcopate of the Church Universal. No
patriarch, no archbishop, no bishop is infallible, all are, accountable to the Church and
primarily to its Episcopate. On may even regret that the initiatives, similar to those
taken by Metropolitan Filaret and which were a common practice in the early Church, have
been virtually abandoned in later times, weakening the solidarity and the common
responsibility of the Episcopate. Formerly, thus, the "Epistle," whether one
agrees or disagrees with all or some of its formulations, might have been a welcome
invitation, in line with the entire Orthodox Tradition, to take the problem of Ecumenism
more seriously and to give it the attention it deserves.

Judgment or Appeal?

The total flaw, however, lies in the fact of an open contradiction between the
perfectly canonical and traditional stand taken in the "Epistle" and the general
policy of the "Russian Church Outside Russia" whose Primate is Metropolitan
Filaret. The "Epistle" consistently refers to Patriarch Athenagoras as "His
Holiness, Patriarch Athenagoras," and to the Archbishop as "His Eminence,
Archbishop Iakovos." And although very serious accusations are stated against both
hierarchs, nowhere is their case presented as being prejudged. The very purpose of the
appeal is precisely to call the brother-bishops to consider the whole matter, for it
belongs indeed to the bishops to judge and to evaluate other bishops actions. That
this is the meaning of the "Epistle" is obvious from its explicit denial to
recognize Patriarch Alexis as the head of the Russian Church. Neither he nor the late
Patriarch Sergius are given the title "His Holiness." Having informed the
Primates and the entire Orthodox Episcopate of his accusations and [having] clearly stated
his case against the Patriarch and the Archbishop, Metropolitan Filaret obviously accepts
the ultimate judgment as belonging to those to whom he writes. Such, I repeat, is the
impression consistently given by the text of the "Epistle."

And it is therefore surprising, to say the least, to see nowhere mentioned in the same
"Epistle" a series of actions and statements emanating from the "Russian
Church Outside Russia," which prove beyond any possible doubt, that both de facto
and de jure that Church has already prejudged the whole case and, on the basis of that
judgment, does not any longer recognize the jurisdictional and canonical rights of either
Patriarch Athenagoras or Archbishop Iakovos or, in fact, of any other autocephalous
Church. The facts are well known: the "Russian Church Outside Russia" has
unilaterally, without any canonical release, accepted clerics, parishes and monasteries
from the jurisdiction of Constantinople, has openly given support and recognition to the
Old-Calendarists on the canonical territory of the Church of Greece, etc., and she has
done all this explicitly on the basis of the claim that the heresy of the Patriarch and
the Archbishop terminates their jurisdiction as Orthodox bishops. If necessary, all this
can be substantiated and proven by official statements and all kinds of documents written
in support of these actions. The church of Metropolitan Filaret does not conceal these
facts; she openly claims her inherent right to accept into their jurisdiction anyone,
anywhere who wants to belong to "true and unadulterated Orthodoxy." She may do
all this in perfect good faith and total sincerity; she may be right or wrongall
this is debatable. What is not debatable, however, is that all of this deprives the
"Sorrowful Epistle" of the canonical significance it may otherwise have bad.

For indeed the appeal by one Orthodox bishop to "Primates, Metropolitans,
Archbishops and all brother-bishops," if it means anything at all, implies first of
all this Bishop recognizes them as brothers i.e., as valid bishops, exercising the fulness
of their rights, recognizes the canonical structure of the Orthodox Church and seeks the
solution of a problem which be deems very serious through established canonical channels.
But this is precisely what the "Russian Church Outside Russia" has consistently
denied by her words and deeds. By unilaterally prejudging the question on which at the
same time she seems to appeal to the universal Episcopate, by openly transgressing
jurisdictional boundaries, by interfering jurisdictionally in the affairs of other
Churches, she has created a schism and put herself out of communion with the Church
Universal. But, then, what meaning could the "Sorrowful Epistle" have?

Controversy Legitimate

These are not petty recriminations but questions of vital importance for the entire
Orthodox Churchfor her unity and order. There have often been serious disagreements
among Orthodox bishops, theologians, Churches, etc. Only a few decades ago, for example,
the very founder of the "Russian Church Outside Russia," the late Metropolitan
Anthony Khrapovitsky, was accused by some of his brothers in the Episcopate of holding and
propagating an erroneous doctrine of the Redemption. The famous clash between two leading
Russian hierarchs of the eighteenth century, Theophan Prokopovich and Stefan Yavorsky, has
been described by Fr. Florovsky as the clash, on the Russian soil, between Latin and
Protestant theologies. Did any of these cases destroy the unity of the Church? For one
thing is to accusethis right belongs to every one in the Churchand quite
another thing is to judge and to decide: this can be done only by prescribed canonical
procedure and our canons clearly define how and by whom bishops are to be judged.

It is conceivable that, once the accusation was made and pending the judgment, one
Church ceases communion with another. What is inconceivable is that pending that judgment
one Church proclaims herself to be the only true Church and assumes, on this basis, a
universal jurisdiction and the right to interfere with jurisdictional rights of other
Churches.

Schism in the Making

One may ask, to which "brothers," to which "Primates" is the
"Sorrowful Epistle" addressed? The hierarchs of the Churches behind the Iron
Curtain being disqualified as canonical bishops on political grounds; Constantinople as
being already condemned; who remains? The Bishops of the Church of Serbia, whose
Patriarch, by accepting the presidency of the WCC, is presumably guilty of some heresy?
The Church of Greece, where the Church of Metropolitan Filaret openly supports the
Old-Calendarists? The Church of Finland which not only has accepted the new calendar but
even celebrates Easter according to the Western computation? The Patriarchs of Jerusalem,
Antioch and Alexandria who are in communion with both Constantinople and Moscow? Once
more, the "Russian Church Outside Russia" may be right or wrong in her doctrinal
standthis is for the entire Church to decidebut on purely canonical grounds
and of her own volition,she is in schism with the totality of the Orthodox
Episcopate and her appeal to it as "brothers" is, to say the least, illogical
and meaningless. One cannot at the same time be in and out. One cannot claim the right to
judge the entire Church and at the same time appeal to her. One cannot pretend to uphold
the canons and at the same time deny canonical protection to those whom she has already
condemned.

All this constitutes exactly the essence of a schism. A schismatic group claims
at first to be right against the particular Church from which it secedes, be it on
doctrinal or disciplinary grounds. At this stage, it may be right or wrongthe
decision ultimately belonging to the Church universal. The irreparable step, however, is
taken when this group does not recognize the decision of the Church as binding it, either
by not waiting for that decision or by rejecting it once it is reached. The Donatists in
Africa appealed to the brother-bishops in Italy and Gaul, but when the decision did not
support them, they proclaimed the whole Church to be wrong and themselves to be right. At
this moment, the schism inevitably becomes "heresy" because of the denial of the
action of the Holy Spirit in the Church. The logic of the schism is always the same, for
it is always rooted in absolute self-righteousnessand it is indeed very instructive
to follow the development of that schismatic mentality within the "Russian Church
Outside Russia."

Opposition to the Whole Church

This church, as several other Russian ecclesiastical bodies, has its roots in the
tragedy of the Russian Revolution of 1917. It developed in the context of the mass exodus
of Russians from Bolshevik-dominated Russia and the almost total collapse of the
ecclesiastical structures in Russia itself. Even then, from the formal point of view, the canonicity of that group was questionable, since it consisted
almost exclusively of bishops having abandoned their dioceses (although each one of them
kept his territorial title) and therefore formally deprived of their jurisdictional rights
which a bishop can exercise only within his diocese, but certainly, not at large, wherever
be goes. Some autocephalous ChurchesConstantinople, Greeceimmediately denied
this new and extraterritorial group ("Outside Russia," i.e., everywhere), any
jurisdictional rights on their territories. Some othersSerbia, Bulgaria, Antioch,
Jerusalemin deference to the spiritual needs of thousands of exiled Russians,
permitted de facto this group to function within their boundaries but only for
ministering to Russian groups and on the condition of full recognition of their own
jurisdictional rights. And for a long time the "Church Outside of Russia,"
although challenged and not recognized by other Russian jurisdictions which arose from the
same Russian tragedy, limited its claims exclusively to Russians, affirming at the same
time that the Russian jurisdictional divisions were strictly an inner problem of the
Russian Church for her alone to solve when she would recover her freedom. In essence, the
"Church Outside of Russia" denied all other Churches the right to evaluate or
judge the Russian ecclesiastical problem.

The situation was changed after 1927 (the year of the "legalization" of the
Church in Russia) when the "Church Outside of Russia," in addition to the
standalso taken by the other Russian jurisdictionsthat the Russian Church,
being deprived of freedom, cannot govern Russians in exile, officially rejected the
Patriarchate of Moscow, denying its canonicity and validity even in Russia itself. Since
all other autocephalous Churches, after some fluctuation, recognized the Patriarchate, the
"Church Outside of Russia" found itself, from a formal point of view, still, in
a schismatic situation. But the "Church Outside of Russia," took a paradoxical
stand: while, on the one hand claiming to belong to the Church Universal, she, on the
other, openly claims to have remained the "only true church," and on the basis
of their "apostasy" denies all other Churches the right to judge and to examine
her own position. Her reasons? If it is not the recognition of Moscow, it is Ecumenism; if
it is not Ecumenism, it is the calendar; it is not the calendar, it is the refusal to
rebaptize the heterodox; and finally if it is not all this, it is "lukewarm
piety."

Open Questions

Whether one wants to [admit it] or not, there exist in the Orthodox Church several open
questions on which the consensus of the Church has not been reached. A theologian, a
bishop, even a local Church, may adopt or defend a particular answer to any of them, but
they cannot claim that theirs is already the answer of the Church in her totality. Thus,
for example, the leaders of the "Russian Church Outside of Russia" know
perfectly well that the Russian Church, whose tradition they claim to maintain, for the
last three hundred years did not rebaptize the heterodox
whose baptism in the name of the Holy Trinity she could ascertain, and that texts for the
three different rites for accepting the heterodox into the Church were approved and
printed by the Holy Synod. This practice may have been wrong, for there existed other
practices based on different theological presuppositions. The question, therefore, may be reopened
and the consensus of the whole Church sought. But the "Church Outside of
Russia," changing the practice of the Russian Church, simply proclaims this to be the
only possible practice and all those not accepting it, heretics. There is no consensus on
Ecumenism, or on the calendar in the Orthodox Church, but so far, the divergence of views
and practices, within a wider unity of Faith, was not considered as an obstacle to full
communion, and above everything else, to a truly "Catholic" search for
consensus.

Is it self-righteousness, this total certitude that she alone possesses the whole truth
that finally led the "Russian Church Outside Russia" to the last and irreparable
step of assuming the right to invite and accept anyone who shares her stand on any of
these questions? By taking that step she has broken her canonical unity with the Orthodox
Church both in principle and in reality. She went objectively and of her own volition into
schism.

Apostasy?

And thus the "Sorrowful Epistle" is wrongly addressed. It ought to have been
addressed not to brother-bishops, for that brotherhood the "Church Outside of
Russia" has willingly and consciously broken, but to Orthodox people everywhere
informing them that their bishops are no longer bishops, that their Churches are no longer
Churches; that their Orthodoxy is no longer Orthodox, and inviting them to join the
ultimate "remnant", i.e., herself. This and this alone would have been loyal and
consistent with the acts and pronouncements of the Church. Whenever she does anything
unprecedented, the "Church Outside of Russia" always justifies it by the area of
"apostasy" which she affirms has begun. But let her then officially announce
that "apostasy" makes canons and procedures, jurisdictional rights and due
process irrelevant and unnecessary. Rather then hypocritically appeal to
"Primates" and "brothers" whose rights she denies, let her officially
inform them that she will accept anyone who comes to her from them, consecrate bishops on
their territories, try to create schisms in their churches, judge and condemn without
trial and that in doing all his she will be accountable to no one, for everyone else has
already surrendered himself to apostasy.

To all those, however, who do not think that "apostasy" did begin in 1917, or
with the appearance of Ecumenism, or with the calendar reform, but who know on the basis
of Holy Scripture that it has always been challenging the Church ("Little children,
it is the last time: and as ye have heard that antichrist shall come, even now are there
man, antichrists; whereby we know that it is the last time." I John 2:18) and who,
therefore, believe that the canonical order and the canonical structures of the Church
were created precisely in order that the Church may defend herself against apostasy; who
furthermore believe that the Holy Spirit will heal every infinity and every weakness in
the Church (and God knows there are many of them), who constantly see him at work in the
patient and humble work of innumerable pastors, in the coming to church of new
generations, all that panicking and fear and hatred are incomprehensible. What they see is
the tragic and truly "sorrowful" birth of a new schism, which sooner or later,
but inevitably, will take the path taken before it by Ebionites, Donatists, Montanists,
Old Believers, etc. That path leads ultimately outside the Church herself; that path is
literally a dead end.

Betrayal

But now what about Ecumenism and the alleged betrayal of the Orthodox delegates at
Uppsala? Since I was not there I would rather see one of the delegates answer that part of
the "Sorrowful Epistle." I can only say that recently I read in Le Monde,
Paris, an article by a leading Protestant in which he states that, in his opinion, the
most significant fact in Uppsala was the "hardening of the Orthodox position"
and a very vocal Orthodox opposition to much of what was proposed by the "ecumenical
establishment."

Personally, I trust people like Fr. Florovsky, Prof.
Verhovskoy, Fr. Meyendorff, Archbishop Basil Krivoscheine, Fr. Livery Voronov and many
others who are not likely to "sell out" Orthodoxy, but must be rather credited
for making Orthodoxy known in the whole Western world, whose ignorance of it was truly
abysmal. No one of them is happy about Uppsala, about the present trend of the ecumenical
movement and no one has concealed orally or in writing, his opposition to it. But there
are many Westerners also who oppose the same trends and who fight alongside our Orthodox
delegates. The unity of "Ecumenism" is a myth which makes it impossible to use
this term as the name of a "heresy." There is good "ecumenism" and bad
"ecumenism." And as long as the Orthodox are permitted to fight for the
"good" one against the "bad" one, as long as their voice is heard, as
long as their consensus (with a few possible exceptions) remains obvious and in fact
increases, the question of the usefulness of our participation in events like
Uppsala may be debated as well as that of our tactics, greater unity, better preparation,
etc., but there should be no room for accusations of betrayal and innuendos of all kinds.

Most certainly "Ecumenism," as well as the interpretations given it by
Patriarch Athenagoras or Archbishop Iakovos or Metropolitan Filaret or any other high
Orthodox dignitary, must be on the agenda for serious Orthodox discussion. An Orthodox
consensus here must be reached. But to use this issue for adding new divisions to our
Church, for creating an atmosphere of suspicion, hatred, accusations and ultimately,
schisms, seems to me a tragedy and a sin.